On the go and no time to finish that story right now? Your News is the place for you to save content to read later from any device. Register with us and content you save will appear here so you can access them to read later.

Last week, the Treasury released the latest findings from its work using the database.

These identified factors in childhood -- such as having a mother with no qualifications -- that were associated with poor outcomes later in life.

The 1 per cent of children who have all four indicators are four times more likely to leave school without qualifications, nine times more likely to serve a prison sentence, and six times more likely to receive benefits for more than five years before they turn 35.

The Treasury also used the data to create an interactive tool that mapped where vulnerable children lived.

A Statistics NZ's general manager, Evelyn Wareham, told a workshop hosted by the Auckland University of Technology that private housing data could be added to the available data.

After her address, Ms Wareham told the Herald that the timing of any data access was yet to be confirmed.

There was huge demand from both Government and researchers for such information, and access would be a big step forward for better understanding housing affordability, she said, "particularly if we can get a robust connection with other authoritative data sources.

"CoreLogic are already doing some things to show patterns at a local level around home ownership and affordability, but we would be able to provide robust national indicators if we could link the data.

"Currently in the Integrated Data Infrastructure we have the earnings data through the tax information, we have tenancy bond data which covers a large number of properties that are tenanted. We don't have the data around home ownership, which is what you'd need to look at affordability measures."

Jonno Ingerson, director of research at CoreLogic, said the collaboration was exciting.

"CoreLogic has comprehensive and accurate property data for the whole country. This comes from a significant effort to purchase, process, clean and store the data from multiple sources over many years.

"Doing this nationwide is usually beyond the resources of most researchers. We therefore see real benefit in making this information available to Government agencies and researchers through this collaboration with Statistics NZ. Having access to detailed information will allow higher-quality research and better outcomes for New Zealand."